When I was in high school I found Sublime Text and learned “multiple cursors”. Since then, I’ve transitioned to vscode, mainly because I need LSP (without too much configuration work) for my work.

I keep hearing about how modal editing is faster and I would like to switch to a more performant editor. I’ve been looking at helix, as the 4th generation of the vi line of editors. Is anyone using it? Is it any good for the main code editor?

The problem that I have is that learning new editing keybindings would probably take me a month of time, before I get to the same amount of productivity (if I ever get here at all). So I’m looking for advice of people who have already done that before.

My code editing does involve a lot of “ctrl-arrow” to move around words, “ctrl-shift-arrow” to select words, “home/end” to move to beginning/end of the line, “ctrl-d” for “new cursor at next occurrence”, “shift-alt-down” for “new cursor in the line below”, “ctrl-shift-f” for “format file” and a few more to move around using LSP-provided “declaration”/“usages”.

I would have to unlearn all of that.

Also, I do use “ctrl-arrow” to edit this post. Have you changed keybindings in firefox too?

  • troed
    link
    fedilink
    32 days ago

    Sublime Text.

    The only thing I need from my editor is syntax highlighting and not be slow.

    (Assembler, C, Python, Java and Bash are the languages I mostly work with)

      • troed
        link
        fedilink
        42 days ago

        Depends on language and platform ;) Ghidra, strace, printouts gets you quite far. The only language I regularly step would be assembler.

        • @mholiv
          link
          32 days ago

          Ghidra seems intense when gdb is right there. Lol. What advantages do you see in using Ghidra on your own code? It seems interesting.

            • @mholiv
              link
              11 hour ago

              Nice. Does it work well for you? How does it compare?

          • troed
            link
            fedilink
            22 days ago

            A lot of what I do (hw/fw hacking) involves running Ghidra on code by others so it’s just a tool I know well. As I mentioned I seldomly step through my own code while debugging high level languages.